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Triangle Method
Heads or Tails?
If we want to add two vectors, such as those below,
we must first make the head of one vector touch the
tail of the other.
Like this: Or this:
Can Only Slide
Notice how when I made the head of one
vector touch the tail of the other, I did not
change their lengths or their directions.
CHANGING THE MAGNITUDE OR THE
DIRECTION MAKES A DIFFERENT
VECTOR!!!
We must slide vectors, preserving their
magnitudes and directions.
Finding the Resultant
Once youve slid your vectors into place (head to
tail), making sure that you didnt change the
magnitude or direction of either one, you can find the
resultant by drawing an arrow from the free tail to the
free head.
Like this: Or this:
Notice that in both cases, we get the same resultant.
Well, that makes sense considering we used the same
two vectors.
Putting It All Together
To see the entire triangle method of vector
addition in action, check out this
simulation.
Notice that the triangle method will work
for any number of vectors. (Although with
more than two, you no longer form a
triangle.
Triangle Method Example 1
A person travels 300 [m] North and 400
[m] East. What is the magnitude of their
displacement?
300 [m]
400 [m]
500 [m]
Triangle Method Example 1
300 [m]
400 [m]
500 [m]
The
resultant is
how many
degrees
North of
East?
?
Triangle Method Example 2
A ship travels 200 [km] at a heading 25
NE then 400 [km] at a heading 55 NW.
What is the magnitude and displacement of
the ship?
HINT: Use the Law of
Cosines
Adding Vectors in Two
Dimensions
Parallelogram Method
Orientation
Unlike the triangle method of vector addition, the
parallelogram method of vector addition doesnt care what
orientation the vectors have.
Vectors can be head to tail, head to head, or
tail to tail.
OR OR
Complete the Parallelogram
Now, you make copies of the original vectors, so that
you complete a parallelogram.
Or this: Or this: Like this:
Resultant
To get the resultant, we draw an arrow from the corner
with two tails to the corner with two heads.
Or this: Or this: Like this:
Notice that no matter what our original orientation was,
we got the same resultant.
Need another look? Check out this simulation.
Parallelogram Method Example
Two forces are acting concurrently (on the
same point at the same time) on a box. F
1
=
40 N East F
2
= 30 N South. What is the
resultant force on the box?
F
1
F
2
F
1
+ F
2
= 50 [N], 37 SE
Making the Connection
Check out what happens when we overlap the two
resultants from the triangle method.
Its the parallelogram method all over again!
Adding Vectors in Two
Dimensions
Analytic Method
Resolving Vectors
Vectors can be resolved into their
components.
In other words, we can make a vector
(thats not along one of the axes) the
hypotenuse of a right triangle.
Using trigonometry, we can then figure out
what each component is.
For Example
Now, we have one component in the x-direction and
one component in the y-direction, making the angle
between them 90.
Notice that our original
vector is the resultant of its
components.
Trig at Work
We know the directions of our components, but how do
we find their magnitudes? Thats where trigonometry
comes into play.